The relationship between responses to the ecological crisis and differing conceptions of Christian eschatology has been widely observed over recent decades. It is a connection that can be researched on a range of different levels: the sociological, the historical and the theological, to name but three. Though they are clearly enmeshed, it is primarily the third of these I would like to explore in this essay, with a focus upon its own interlinked exegetical, doctrinal and moral strata.Footnote 1 I want to start with the biblical. Yet the starting point apparently available to us as we begin with scriptural interpretation may seem distinctly unpromising. As Stephen Barton writes, much reflection on our question often exhibits the ‘suspicion that New Testament eschatology – in some of its aspects, at least – is fundamentally pessimistic about the future of the world; that, if heaven and earth are to pass away (even if to be transformed into something better), a positive theological and psychological commitment to environmental care is undermined’.Footnote 2
Precisely in response to this kind of misgiving, a number of biblical scholars have offered bracing, even caustic, critiques of traditional eschatological hopes, offering in their place robust affirmations of a strongly this-worldly vision of new creation. This perspective – we might clunkily term it ‘continuationist’ – has been widely influential beyond the academy, through the work of N.T. Wright and Richard Middleton in particular. In an arguably half-heard form, it represents the favoured eschatological outlook of many who preach and teach in our churches today. The position surely has its merits, and to it we can perhaps attribute some salutary effects upon the ethical practices of some Christians. Yet, unbeknownst to many in the church, the scriptural interpretation this sensibility is said to derive from is not without serious exegetical contestation within the guild of New Testament studies. Moreover, the most significant contemporary voices in systematic theology press towards constructive eschatological visions of a more discontinuous or transcendent kind. In fact, they often they do so by way of thoroughgoing retrieval of exactly those traditional elements of Christian hope deemed inauthentic and irresponsible by the writers I have mentioned. And the systematicians are aware of the semi-popular continuationist consensus: these writers mount a serious critique of what they perceive in it as a modern trend towards ‘eschatological naturalism’, that is, the reduction of scriptural eschatological vision to the immanent frame.
It seems, then, that we have both exegetical and dogmatic reasons to pause, and to investigate the apparent self-evidence of this continuationist position as grounds – or, at least, when presented as the principal grounds – for Christian ecological responsibility. But, necessary though it is, where would this troubling of assumptions leave us in terms of any sense of a positive articulation of the link between eschatology and environmental ethics? At first glance, it would seem to sever a vital connection. On closer scrutiny, however, I suggest that the presumed coupling of a particular construal of new creation with ecological responsibility in fact trades upon simplistic assumptions about how different theological commitments connect to moral reasoning. Furthermore, stated positively, what if we discover that more discontinuous and transcendent visions of the life to come are not only not always ethically enfeebling, but might in their own way be able to inspire moral imagination and faithful witness? Going beyond first impressions, what if these otherworldly hopes are able to animate and sustain earth-keeping practices and the struggle for ecojustice in our time – just as they have before now motivated other struggles for justice?
In what follows, I begin by outlining the salient features of the continuationist compact, before presenting its exegetical and doctrinal detractors in turn. In the final section, I draw on James Cone's eschatological meditations to explore how discontinuous interpretations of the life to come need not undermine responsible action, and might even in some cases be such action's necessary imaginative condition.
The continuationist compact
First, then, let us review the pertinent features of what we might call the continuationist compact. Because the general lineaments of this perspective are well known, and because I want to press on to explore the critical and contrastive voices, which are perhaps less well known, I will be relatively brief. The key claims are quite easy to grasp, and that is surely part of the attraction.
For N.T. Wright, a properly formed Christian hope nourished on the scriptures is focused upon ‘a renewed body living on a renewed earth’.Footnote 3 Besides an exegetical case, Wright has a polemical concern to overcome (even ridicule) what he describes as a widespread understanding – shown in hymns and songs, for instance – of ‘escapist salvation’.Footnote 4 Evidently, part of this concern is ethical in nature. Wright's treatment prosecutes two questions he sees as inseparable. In his words: ‘First, what is the ultimate Christian hope? Second, what hope is there for change, rescue, transformation, new possibilities within the world in the present?’ For, he writes, ‘as long as we see Christian hope in terms of “going to heaven”, of a salvation that is essentially away from this world, the two questions are bound to appear as unrelated’.Footnote 5
As Dale Allison observes, then, Wright is characteristically ‘anxious about an other-worldly escapism that might deflate social responsibility’.Footnote 6 It is central to Wright's argument that a construal of scriptural expectation as focused upon God's renewal of creation furnishes ‘every possible incentive, or at least every Christian incentive, to work for the renewal of God's creation and for justice within God's creation’.Footnote 7 (A comparable and now also somewhat influential perspective is offered by J. Richard Middleton, though it is sufficiently similar to Wright's that we do not need to rehearse it here.)Footnote 8
Now, such portrayals of eschatological redemption do appear attractive as a – even at first blush the – theological premise for Christian environmental responsibility. Notably, these accounts are motivated in part by a well-merited allergy to over-heated fundamentalist prognostications and predictions of cosmic demise that have undeniably so often been caught up with egregious disregard for God's creation. Against such a backdrop, we should at the very least appreciate the sense in which these continuationist interpretations are conceived as reparative in relation to the dualisms of crassly dispensationalist schemes. Just so, we can be grateful for their re-discovery of theological concern for the flourishing of non-human creation and rejection of narrowly anthropocentric accounts of salvation, their holistic notion of Christian mission, and their commitment to the goods of embodied and relational existence, including – under the influence of neo-Calvinism – the Christian vocation within cultural, social and political life.Footnote 9 In some ways, without wishing to reduce the exegesis to a mere cipher, we could say that the exegetical shifts exemplified by Wright and his generation of scholars are of a piece with salutary developments in Protestant evangelical social ethics, which the interpretive moves are perhaps in some ways designed to secure within more-or-less biblicist constituencies.
However (and leaving aside the ethics for a moment), it is striking to notice that recent years have also seen countervailing trends within biblical and doctrinal scholarship: trajectories of interpretation and contemplation issued sometimes in direct critique of the kinds of accounts just canvased, or sometimes by foregrounding contrasting (or complementary) themes within projects of retrieval and construction. I will turn first to the headlines of exegetical contestation, before noting some of the key contributions within contemporary systematic theology that stand at variance with the continuationist compact.
Exegetical contestation
It seems to me that there are essentially two areas where scholarly demurral from the position indicated above – at least as expressed in its less nuanced articulations – should be noted. In different ways, both relate to continuity and discontinuity. Roughly speaking, we might term one a matter of ‘positive’ discontinuity. That is, a question of the heavenly and the transcendent. The other we can call a question of ‘negative’ discontinuity. In other words, the issue of the disjunctive (even destructive, or at least radically purificatory) nature of the passage of creation from this order to the next. This pair of queries is voiced well within New Testament studies by Markus Bockmuehl and Edward Adams respectively, and I will highlight salient features of the arguments of each here.Footnote 10 Before observing the disagreements, however, to be charitable and proportionate we should recall that much scholarly dissatisfaction with Wright and his fellow travellers – and this is true of our two interlocutors – is prefaced with appreciation for his and their attempts more generally. Bockmuehl is representative when he writes that the ‘broader concerns of Tom Wright's eschatological scheme seem to me wholly laudable, perhaps above all in his argument that the bodily resurrection of Jesus is the fundamental pillar of the Christian story of salvation.’Footnote 11 What is at stake in the parting of ways, then, has to be specified carefully. It is not so much, if at all, about what Wright and others wish to safeguard; it is principally about what they imagine they need to jettison in order to do so. And, for my ultimate purposes here, it is not least about the veracity and persuasiveness of the moral propositions involved in continuationist arguments for what must be made fundamental and what must be ditched.
Let us turn first to Bockmuehl's questioning of Wright's position in the aptly titled ‘Did St Paul Go to Heaven When He Died?’ As we have established, Bockmuehl shares quite a bit with Wright, so far as Pauline eschatology goes, but seeks to interrogate the ‘conviction that an affirmation of the bodily resurrection necessitates a denial of the traditional Christian belief that the faithful “go to heaven” when they die’.Footnote 12 Rehearsing some of Wright's stronger claims, he comments:
While Scripture is hardly systematic on this point, a number of texts ranging from the Gospel of John (e.g. John 3:14 with John 12:32; 14:2–3; 17:24) via Ephesians (e.g. Eph 2:6) to Hebrews (e.g. Heb 12:22–24) do seem at least prima facie to imply what Wright denies: it is precisely because of Christ's resurrection and ascension that Christians too gain access to the heavenly Jerusalem as the eternal dwelling place of the exalted Christ which in the new creation will be universally revealed, redeeming and subsuming the old.Footnote 13
The key issue is Wright's parsing of references to the heavenly solely to the intermediate state rather than the final destination of the glorified, and therein his forthright eschewal of any ‘use of the word heaven to denote the ultimate goal of the redeemed’.Footnote 14 Bockmuehl proceeds to address the relevant texts (2 Corinthians 5, 1 Thessalonians 4, 1 Corinthians 15, Philippians 3), showing that they need not be interpreted that way. Further contextualising these references in relation to other New Testament texts (Colossians, Ephesians, 2 Timothy), he writes: ‘Such heavenly places clearly seem in these texts a permanent, not a temporary destination, however much it may be the case that the world to come will render these universally present and visible’.Footnote 15 Bockmuehl concludes by reviewing how interpreters in the early centuries of the church took Paul's claims: once again, ‘the church fathers did not regard the expectation of “going to heaven” as a corruption of the hope of bodily resurrection (or vice versa), but firmly held on to both convictions without compromising either one.’Footnote 16 All told, then, by seeking to make us choose:
in certain pivotal denials Wright seems paradoxically to subvert a number of vital affirmations about the Pauline hope, appearing repeatedly to insist on the abiding importance of an earth-heaven distinction, and thus allowing for an ultimate eschatological space that is in some sense God's new world but emphatically not ‘heaven’.Footnote 17
Interestingly, Bockmuehl is also attentive to the moral dimensions of Wright's case, detecting that his ‘strong resistance to the idea of a heavenly dimension seems at times compelled as much by understandable fears about Christian ecological and political escapism as by the biblical texts themselves.’Footnote 18
Another important dissenting voice from within biblical studies has been Edward Adams, who made a substantive entry into the discussion with his study The Stars will Fall from Heaven: Cosmic Catastrophe in the New Testament and its World.Footnote 19 Adams’ enquiry focuses on New Testament texts that employ language of cosmic catastrophe (Mark 13:24–25 and par.; Heb 12:25–29; 2 Pet 3:5–13; Rev 6:12–17), reading them within their textual contexts and comparatively in relation to Graeco-Roman and Jewish texts. He concludes that the ‘evidence contradicts Wright's claim that early Christians never contemplated such a thing’; rather, ‘the expectation of the end of creation is an important strand of New Testament cosmic-eschatological thought’.Footnote 20 We can discern ‘two distinct cosmic-eschatological schemes’ in the New Testament: ‘destruction and creation anew’, such as is envisaged in these texts, and ‘non-destructive transformation’, as anticipated in Romans 8:18–25.Footnote 21
Adams, too, is alert to the moral import of interpretation. In fact, he finishes his book with a very brief reflection on the significance of all this for environmental ethics, concluding as follows:
The catastrophic expectation we find in the New Testament is not ultimately a pessimistic one; it is part of an eschatology of hope. In 2 Pet and Rev, that hope is for a new heavens and earth, brought about by God's redemptive action. This hope is one that can inspire action for change and justice and in a world and society where God is not ‘all in all’.Footnote 22
In a more recent article, Adams offers a convincing further case study of 2 Peter 3:5–13 and reflects at slightly more length on the implications for environmental ethics. His sober summary of the exegetical results is as follows: ‘Attempts to retrieve the passage for the environment based on the claim that what is envisioned is transformation and not destruction fail to persuade’.Footnote 23 Therefore, any ‘seeking to derive from the Bible a positive environmental ethic need to acknowledge that the Bible has more than one way of conceiving the cosmic future and that the various statements cannot be pressed into a singular vision of non-destructive transformation’.Footnote 24
Yet the intention of Adams’ study is not to undermine such attempts at deriving what he describes as a ‘biblical theology and ethic of the environment’, but rather to complicate some of the binary interpretive possibilities imagined by what I have called continuationist accounts. Where the perspectives available to the scriptural authors were thought to be incompatibly siloed into expectations of either ‘annihilation’ or ‘transformation’, this dichotomy is complicated by the apparent view of the author of 2 Peter, for whom ‘the dissolution of heaven and earth is part of a process of renewal, which brings about a new heavens and new earth in continuity with what has gone before’.Footnote 25 Moreover, whereas for Wright, Adams suggests, ‘the very idea of the world coming to an end betokens a world-negating, dualistic cosmology’, in the view of the epistle, ‘the expectation of a cosmic destruction does not entail a negative assessment of the present creation as innately evil’.Footnote 26 And, relatedly, ‘living in the light of the end and re-creation… does not mean the abandonment of ethical obligations’, but if anything the intensification of them.Footnote 27
In sum, we find from within biblical studies plenty of reasons to pause over the exegetical claims undergirding the more undialectical continuationist perspective. We also encounter, already, a clue to the complexity of the attendant moral implications.
Doctrinal reservations and departures
At the same time, recent forays in eschatology from within systematic theology have pursued constructive trajectories which would seem really quite surprising from the pew, in view of the pervasive influence of the continuationist vision on popular perception of the status quaestionis. We might note in particular Michael Allen's Grounded in Heaven, Hans Boersma's Seeing God, and an essay ‘Towards a Doctrine of Resurrection’ by Katherine Sonderegger.Footnote 28 To these Reformed and Anglican (though certainly ecumenically-minded) contributions we can add three significant treatments written from squarely within Catholic theology, from Matthew Levering, John Thiel and Paul Griffiths.Footnote 29 Central to many of these examples, both Protestant and Catholic, is the patient retrieval of the tradition's rich theology of the beatific vision as the highest hope of Christian eschatology. Accompanying this doctrinal republication, and perhaps most arrestingly for contemporary believers, is unembarrassed commendation of ‘heavenly-mindedness’ as a concomitant virtue and orientation for the spiritual and moral life.Footnote 30
Importantly, also common to most of the above is the sense that the dogmatic inheritance they are receiving – and, to a greater or lesser degree, self-consciously elaborating upon or extending – consists at its heart in compelling conceptual amplifications of scriptural promises, and perhaps supremely ‘the biblical promise that after death believers will see God face-to-face’.Footnote 31 To be sure, none of these projects are flatly exegetical, even as they are all nourished by the Scriptures. They evince various levels and styles of engagement with the philosophical presuppositions of patristic, medieval, reformational and modern eschatologies (for instance, the authors are more-or-less inclined to explicitly espouse a Christian Platonism within which, for some, the biblical claims might best hang together). But I trust that it should go without saying that none of the authors could accurately be described as exchanging the hope set out in the biblical texts for some kind of ethereal escape of the sort the continuationists often seem to allege.
Certainly, the various projects do perhaps exhibit some differences in how they gesture towards the correlation of the principal theme of communion with God with other eschatological teachings, including the resurrection of the body, the reconciliation of creatures with one another, and the kingdom reign of justice and peace. Significant synthetic questions remain: about the extent to which the transcendent strands knit well with an essentially continuationist account of the life to come; about, for example, whether and how you can or should put such notions of transformation ‘within’ an overarching motif of restoration (and restoration of what exactly?); or about whether we are permitted to depart a little further from what Allison describes as Wright's ‘geocentric faith’.Footnote 32 Meanwhile, questions will also arise about whether any such tidy synthesis is in itself a fitting goal of theological enquiry into the ineffable mysteries of the eschaton.Footnote 33 Of the contemporary systematicians adduced above, it is Levering's contribution that perhaps weaves the threads together most tightly, seeking their convergence in a Thomistic tapestry of hope in which ‘the vision of God fulfils our embodied life on earth and is profoundly united to bodily resurrection and the new creation of the cosmos.’Footnote 34 Evidently, with all this in mind, my shorthand of ‘continuationist’ is not by itself sufficiently fine-grained a category to differentiate perspectives at that further level of possible commitments. We have already seen that Adams among the exegetes would seem to locate the narrative arc of disjunction within a larger story of renewal, though this renewal could not entail simple material perdurance. The same kind of incorporation of themes would hold true for some of our systematic theologians.
What I want to draw particular attention to here, though, is that these dogmaticians are not innocent of the development of ‘this-worldly’ eschatologies in the work of biblical theologians like Wright and Middleton. Rather, while they often acknowledge some of the salutary broader emphases – on the resurrection of the body, say, or the cosmic scope of redemption – their constructive projects are often conceived in direct and critical dialogue with exactly such voices. As I have intimated, the key charge laid by contemporary systematics at the continuationists’ bureau is the one Allen terms ‘eschatological naturalism’.Footnote 35 The biblical theologians, on this view, are much more conditioned than they realise by what Sonderegger in her extraordinary sketch calls ‘the modern pre-occupation with this-worldliness’.Footnote 36
Now, these doctrinal accounts have not, themselves, tended to address the implications of their theological proposals for ecological ethics. Some do gesture towards the import of ‘heavenly-mindedness’ (Allen's phrase) for the moral life as such; in the title of Christopher Morse's book, to The Difference Heaven Makes.Footnote 37 Remarkably, Griffiths’ proposal, Decreation: the Last Things of All Creatures, directly courts an eschatologically-inspired quietism – a sensibility decidedly and deliberately opposed to the mainline ecclesial concerns of our time!Footnote 38 In general, I suppose we might be inclined to urge the systematicians to be more concrete in showing us how their constructive visions can orient the struggle to live faithfully here and now. Nevertheless, it is again important to observe that many of these projects are conceived as correctively theocentric and therapeutically anagogical; and as that in a moment where we are susceptible to what Thiel narrates as an ‘imaginative reduction’ to ‘immanentology’.Footnote 39 As Rowan Greer wrote, the theological productions of our secular age often run ‘the risk that the last things … become no more than a way of talking about the meaning of the here and now’.Footnote 40
We should note one more feature observable in recent theological handling of eschatological themes, and that is the apophatic reserve which marks quite a few projects in contemporary systematics.Footnote 41 Enquiries into the nature of eschatological transformation are, at present as they are perennially, attended by important disagreements not just about what should be said but about how much can or should be said at all. Plainly, nobody claims that their faltering intellectual approximation of the glories of the life to come arrives at certainty with regard to the exact qualities of the kingdom of heaven. The ‘epistemological chasm’ between Creator and creature that conditions all theological speech is, if anything, heightened when we turn to the eschatological, peering as we do into ‘a mirror, dimly’ (1 Cor 13:12).Footnote 42 Scripture's symbolic world does invite us to contemplate a panoply of images, ‘a dizzying array’,Footnote 43 and the theological imagination can work with these constructively by piecemeal analogical apprehension. Yet we must be cautious about a kind of theological ‘rationalism, submitting to the familiar canons of human reasoning mysteries that lie beyond our fallen experience of space and time’.Footnote 44 Ultimately, as St. Macrina says to St. Gregory of Nyssa in their dialogue On the Soul and the Resurrection: ‘The truth about this is stored up in the hidden treasury of wisdom and will be disclosed at the time when we are taught the mystery of the resurrection in deed.’Footnote 45 In current theological discourse, there exist palpably divergent perspectives on what would constitute ‘misplaced apophaticism’, on the one hand, or a fitting ‘imaginative restraint’, on the other (so Karen Kilby, in critical conversation with Thiel).Footnote 46
As it happens, and perhaps by comparison with a theologian such as Kilby, most of the doctrinal theologians I have named above seem remarkably sanguine about pursuing what St. Maximus the Confessor called ‘good and pious speculation’ or ‘reverent conjecture’.Footnote 47 But – and here is the crucial analytical point – none of them seem to do so in the same univocal manner as do the continuationist biblical theologians as regards the familiarities of the new creation. It suffices to say here that some of the continuationist depiction we have touched on may be ‘over-luxuriant’ in its ‘anticipation of the future of the earth’ (as Celia Deane-Drummond writes of Moltmann's admittedly fairly different proposals).Footnote 48 And in that sentence we might underscore or italicise the earth. It is the over-confidence about this-worldly – meaning in this case this-earthly – continuity that is the issue, not necessarily the liveliness of the eschatological imagination as such, or the joyful hope for the full renewal of the cosmos by its Creator.
However we judge such discussions about the legitimacy or otherwise of these various accounts’ epistemological confidence, however we might or might not settle the compatibility of various eschatological hopes, whatever taste we have for possible systematic configurations of them – I suggest that we have seen enough to crystallise a modest but not insignificant conclusion.Footnote 49 Namely, that considerations of genuine eschatological discontinuity and transcendence seem to trouble any account that offers a univocal or materially literal notion of a ‘world without end’. Just so, it is not sustainable for continuationist accounts to proceed ironclad, oblivious to other exegetical and doctrinal concerns (let alone philosophical or scientific questions, which may outstrip the theological in the strength of their pressure towards the stringently apophatic).Footnote 50 And, to arrive at the particular limited point of my argument in this article, if this is so, then what is often presented as a straightforward moral argument, running something like, ‘because the new creation will be this-worldly, we ought to care for it now’, will begin to look a little bit more complicated.
Where does all that leave us?
All told, it seems both exegetically and doctrinally responsible to ease apart a little the assumed compact of a particular eschatological construal of this-worldly continuity and a commitment to ecological responsibility. The diversity of scriptural witness; the presence within that testimony of heavenly hopes, not to mention the predication of discontinuous transformation; the extensive elaboration of Scripture's more transcendent themes throughout the Christian tradition; the acknowledgment of the need for some apophatic disciplining of our eschatological imagination: each of these would caution against over-easy contemporary correlation of exegetical position with ethical programme. Yet, if this un-coupling of claims may at first glance seem to threaten a theological rationale for environmental action that many hold dear, on closer inspection it may turn out to be quite helpful.
First, to disentangle the two allows eschatology to take its place within a much wider set of theological commitments that can motivate Christian action on ecological issues, rather than bearing all the weight. These commitments include, of course, the doctrine of creation. But they would also feature the doctrines of sin and providence, as well as the incarnation, and moral teachings such as the preference for the poor.Footnote 51 Along with a more subtle grasp of the exegetical issues, then, we need to seek a more sophisticated understanding of the multiplicity of doctrinal wellsprings that can foster ethical responsibility, and which, through worship, prayer, preaching, and so on, can imperfectly but genuinely shape the moral affections required for us to act with ecological justice.Footnote 52
Second, it means that the more transcendent aspects of a full-orbed Christian eschatology – motifs caricatured by the continuationists in their cruder rhetoric as ‘Greek’ corruptions – can be properly contemplated without having at every turn to answer the charge that by meditating on them we are exchanging authentically apostolic hope for ‘gnostic’ flight.Footnote 53 I would argue that we can hold both that the imagination of new creation should inform ethical action in the present, and that there are aspects of eschatological – spiritual – longing that cannot be ‘cashed out’ without remainder in ethics and need not issue in a morally deleterious contemptus mundi.Footnote 54
And third, it affords the latitude for a theological and moral case to be made for ecological responsibility which can take in not just those who have subscribed to academic (or more likely popularising) accounts of a continuationist kind, but also persuade those whose eschatological imagination encompasses more discontinuous or transcendent elements. In the final section of this essay, then, I want to offer a brief example which demonstrates just such a case.
In this respect, I suggest that we take encouragement from the witness of black theological traditions, as conveyed in the writings of, among others, Howard Thurman and James H. Cone.Footnote 55 I will focus on Cone's work here, though Thurman's reflections in Deep River are also highly germane.Footnote 56 Cone wrestles with eschatology throughout his work, and especially in three key earlier books: A Black Theology of Liberation, God of the Oppressed, and The Spirituals and the Blues, where he devotes a chapter to ‘The Meaning of Heaven in the Black Spirituals’.Footnote 57 In what follows I intend to draw out some key features of Cone's account as they bear on our theme, largely focusing on the latter two texts.
‘Over-worldliness’ and moral struggle in the present
Addressing the vivid eschatological imagery of the spirituals, Cone wonders frankly what to do with them. As he writes, he is emerging from the imaginative constraints of a world of Protestant scholarship that applied the acids of demythologising to biblical eschatology and had no time for traditional or ‘folk’ expectations of the life to come.Footnote 58 But Cone gains the courage to attend to the songs’ longings on their own terms: ‘the pre-scientific images of heaven in these songs point to a biblical emphasis usually glossed over by New Testament scholars. Black slaves are expressing the Christian contention that the death and resurrection of Christ bestows upon people a freedom that cannot be taken away by oppressors’.Footnote 59 His analysis identifies two main aspects of eschatological belief, each of which he connects to the contemporary struggle for liberation. I suggest that the way he does so holds for us a clue about how we might conceive the compatibility of, and even intimate connection between, our present life of active witness and our hope for an eschatological future that is ‘more than we can ask or imagine’ (Eph 3:20).
Heaven functions first of all, Cone observes, as ‘The Transcendent Present’. Here we see the sense in which ‘the spirituals employ eschatological language to express transcendence in the slaves’ present existence – not ‘passively waiting for the future’ but rather ‘actively living as if the future were already present in the community’.Footnote 60 In this aspect, he writes, we find ‘the realized dimensions of God's eschatological presence’:Footnote 61
These songs make clear that the future is not simply a reality to come. It is a reality that has already happened in Jesus’ resurrection, and is present now in the midst of the black struggle for liberation. To accept the future of God as disclosed in the present means that we cannot be content with the present political order. God's eschatological presence arouses discontentment and makes the present subject to radical change.Footnote 62
Yet alongside this present aspect, which empowers struggle for liberation here and now in history, there is also what he describes as hope in ‘The Transcendent Future’: ‘the concept of heaven was not exhausted by historical reality or present existence… heaven was also hope in the future of God, an expectation that the contradictions of slavery were not ultimate’.Footnote 63 Significantly, in elucidating this second aspect Cone quotes 1 John 3:2: ‘“Beloved, we are God's children now; it does not appear what we shall be, but we know that when he appears we shall be like him, for we shall see him as he is”’. He comments: the ‘not yet affirmed the novum of divine presence that was still to come. It was the expectation of the future of God, grounded in the resurrection of Jesus’.Footnote 64 ‘This hope’ is ‘in a radically new future, defined solely by God the Liberator’.Footnote 65
He turns to the same biblical text and theme in God of the Oppressed: ‘There is included in liberation the “not yet”, a vision of a new heaven and a new earth. This simply means that the oppressed have a future not made with human hands but grounded in the liberating promises of God. They have a liberation not bound by their own strivings.’Footnote 66 In this book especially, Cone is in dialogue with other discourses of liberation, and realises that for many readers, ‘talk about “long white robes” and “golden slippers” in heaven seems to be proof that black religion is an opium of the people’.Footnote 67 He knows that ‘white oppressors did preach “pie in the sky” as a means to get black people to accept their exploitation’.Footnote 68 Yet based on his reading of the texts – and their historical subtexts – Cone insists that ‘analysis of black eschatology as merely compensatory is too superficial’.Footnote 69 For him, the witness of luminous figures of resistance ‘are enough evidence that such language about God and heaven does not always lead to passivity’.Footnote 70 Rather, he writes, ‘“The home over yonder”, vividly and artistically described in the black slave songs, is a gift of divine freedom. If this “over-worldliness” in freedom is not taken with utmost seriousness, then there is no way for the oppressed to be sustained in the struggle against injustice.’Footnote 71
We could say more; there is a lot going on in the songs, and in Cone's commentary more broadly. But we have attended to the two key eschatological aspects, and I want to draw particular attention to the profound connection in the second between ‘over-worldliness’ – the hope for a ‘radically new future’ – and moral struggle in the present. I am cautious about appropriating Cone's summary and theological analysis of the spirituals tradition, a tradition which is not my own, which originates in situations of suffering that I have not undergone, and which is totally irreducible to its distillation in formal theology. But my reading is based on the conviction that we find here an acute (and hard won) set of insights, which I want to suggest might be taken as a witness the whole church can be instructed by. That is, importantly, not to draw any compassing equivalency between the struggle against racial oppression and the response to ecological crisis, though Cone himself wrote of the need in our understanding to connect ‘racism with the degradation of the earth’.Footnote 72 It is also certainly not to imply that we could easily align Cone's whole eschatology with the trends in contemporary systematics identified above. For one thing, while he was deliberately addressing doctrinal loci in these works, Cone was relating to a different era's hermeneutical and philosophical assumptions. For another, he can be at times sharply critical of ‘elaborate speculations about the end… Too much of this talk’, he wrote, ‘is not good for the revolution.’Footnote 73
Nevertheless, I think that Cone's interpretation, among others, can help us to see that more discontinuous and transcendent imaginaries of the life to come need not undermine action for justice here and now. It is in this focused sense that we can join the thought up with the particular topic of this essay, and extend the argument to ecological justice. And perhaps on the basis of what we have seen, we can also say a little more. Because it is in part precisely the transcendent element of Christian hope that, for many who have engaged in moral struggle, sustains commitment when historical trajectories appear unpromising and prospects of transformation in the present seem bleak. As Cone writes, quoting a spiritual: ‘The courage and the strength to keep on fighting in this world are based on the hope that “de udder worl’ is not like dis.”’Footnote 74 Andrew Prevot's summary is apt:
Cone's much-needed focus on the historical meaning of eschatology, as expressed in the this-worldly struggle for black liberation, does not prevent him from also hoping for a more absolute form of divine liberation beyond history. In fact, this absolute hope gives courage to those still engaged in the fight.Footnote 75
Transposed to the environmental issue at hand, this seems a timely reminder. In our rapidly out-of-control ecological emergencies, any number of empirical indicators may otherwise invite sheer pessimism, disillusionment and detachment.
If Cone's concerns about the kinds of speculation that detract from present responsibility may be well taken, he can also help us to see that to ‘hold before our eyes the vision of Another World’, in the words of Sonderegger, can be part of the solution, not just the problem. She goes on:
Those of us made earnest by the Social Gospel and its allergy to an alienating wish for Heaven, may fear that a longing for Heaven above will cut the nerve to Kingdom work below. But not so! It is the deepening longing for true satisfaction, for Heavenly Rest and redemption, which opens, in truth, our hearts and minds to the longings and miseries of this age.Footnote 76
Conclusion
Altogether, then, I have sought in a limited way to troublesome assumptions about eschatology and ecological responsibility that are abroad in contemporary theology and the church. I trust that it is clear that this exercise of disentanglement is pursued not out of any desire to weaken Christian commitment to ecological action, but – quite the opposite – because of the conviction that we cannot allow Christian response to one of the great challenges of our time to be overly associated with a particular interpretive agenda, and thereby a hostage to critical exegetical fortune or ignored by those whose eschatological imagination is formed otherwise. Whatever the attractions of the line of reasoning that ‘this-worldly hope = present responsibility’, we cannot allow our moral witness to be governed by pure pragmatics, but instead must maintain our pursuit, however uncomfortable, of theological integrity.Footnote 77 And we must trust that it is the truest grasp of the Lord's promises that will prove most generative for our ethics in the long run; ‘since, then, we have such a hope, we act with great boldness’ (2 Cor 3:12).